For release July 6,
2006
3 SPACE INSTITUTE EMPLOYEES
RETIRE;
PLAYED VARIED ROLES IN UTSI’S HISTORY
Three employees with distinctly different
roles in the life of The University of Tennessee Space Institute
have retired after a combined total of 83 years at the
41-year-old graduate school and research center.
Two others, whose June 30 retirement was previously announced,
upped the total service for the five to 151 years.
Attending an ice cream social in their honor were Marjorie B.
(Marge) Joseph of Manchester, third librarian in UTSI’s history,
who retired with 32 years, Charlotte Campbell of Estill Springs,
administrative specialist, 28 years, and Newton W. (Newt)
Wright, research associate, Manchester, 23 years.
Dr. John E. Caruthers also retired June 30 as UT associate vice
president and UTSI chief operating officer, as did Robert L.
Parson of Hillsboro, who began his four decades at UTSI as a
custodian, advanced to manager of the physical plant, and closed
as craft supervisor.
Growing up in New York, Marge Joseph was an avid reader,
but “never thought of librarianship as a profession until a high
school guidance counselor, who apparently knew me better than I
thought she did, suggested it.”
Charlotte Melton Campbell got her first glimpse of UTSI
when she rode her motorcycle to the lower level of the
Institute, next to Woods Reservoir, and exclaimed: “What a
beautiful place!” She didn’t dream she’d later work there.
Newt Wright, who at five built his first crystal radio,
took to the electronics challenges at UTSI like Canada geese to
the campus, and helped blaze new trails in the Institute’s
Center for Laser Applications.
It was at a Christmas party in 1973 that Dr. B.H. Goethert,
first UTSI dean, suggested that Marge Joseph join Helen Mason
and Mary Lo as librarians. Marge’s husband, Dr. Roy D. Joseph,
had been hired in September as associate professor of electrical
engineering.
With nearly 10 years experience as a children’s librarian in
Elmont, Long Island, Marge joined UTSI’s library on Feb. 11,
1974. Mrs. Mason, also of Manchester, was head librarian from
1965 to 1987, followed by Mrs. Lo of Tullahoma, who retired in
2000 and was succeeded by Mrs. Joseph.
At first, Marge’s office was on second floor of C-Wing while the
other two librarians were on the ground floor. When MHD research
took off like wild fire, she was moved to lower C. The library –
along with other major construction of the “west wing” addition
to the academic building – opened and was site of a major
celebration in April 1982 of the completion of the $1.9 building
project. (Charlotte Campbell helped plan that celebration.)
With a bachelor’s degree from the State University of New York
at Geneseo and a master’s from Queens College, City University
of New York, Marge was certified both as a librarian and as a
classroom teacher for K-6. In the early 60’s, she worked summers
in Queens Borough Public Library.
From 1981 to 1985, working around her schedule in the UTSI
library, she also was a librarian on an “as-needed” basis at
AEDC. After attending two weeks of security school and taking
several correspondence courses, she passed the exam given by the
Department of Defense Security Institute to become certified by
the Department of Defense and from 1988 until retiring, she was
Facility Security Officer for UTSI.
Born in Delano, Tennessee, Charlotte
Melton moved to Tullahoma with her parents – Violet and
Wesley Melton -- and graduated from THS. After marrying Tommy
Campbell, they lived in East Tennessee before returning to
Middle Tennessee. For almost seven years Charlotte worked for
the Air Force, managing AEDC’s golf pro shop. She got acquainted
with several UTSI folk, including Dr. Charlie Weaver, who
succeeded Goethert as dean. She also knew Dr. Robert Young,
Freeman Binkley, Dewey Vincent and several other UTSI golfers,
but it was Weaver who told her that Vincent, manager of the
physical plant, needed a secretary.
“Edna Stallings and Roberta Anspach both worked at UTSI…and both
played golf,” Charlotte remembers. She also knew Roberta’s
husband Gene and their son Keith, who worked at the golf course.
After Keith was critically injured in an automobile accident on
the night of his high school graduation, his mother resigned as
part-time secretary to Vincent.
(On the evening before the accident that left the THS graduate a
quadriplegic, Charlotte remember seeing Keith “playing a round
of golf with friends.” In the years ahead, Roberta was at
Keith’s side as he earned a bachelor’s degree and then at UTSI
as he earned a master’s and doctorate.”)
“Freeman and Dewey and others insisted that I apply as Dewey’s
secretary,” Charlotte says. “I said, ‘Me, work at UTSI, with all
those smart people?’” She hadn’t typed in years, and she was
facing surgery, but “they insisted they wanted me for the job,
and they waited till I had my surgery.”
She started work in D Wing on July 10, 1978. When she met Bob
Kamm, Goethert’s assistant, he greeted her with: “So, you’re the
one we’ve been waiting for.”
Charlotte plans to continue at UTSI on a part-time basis. She
notes that Joe Hane of Tullahoma, who with the late Bill Yeomans,
hired on at UTSI about the time she did, is the only person from
the early days still on the physical plant crew. The dedication
of her fellow workers to their tasks and the camaraderie of
those early days stand out in Charlotte’s memory.
Included in the major construction of the library and academic
building was the physical plant building. “Dewey was notified
that documents had been signed,” Charlotte recalls, “and we
could actually occupy the new Physical Plant building on Nov.
23, 1981 – my birthday. We moved in about a month later. The
underground gas tank was filled up, so UT vehicles were being
filled for travel at the new building before we moved in.”
On Nov. 14, 1990, the physical plant building was dedicated to
Dewey M. Vincent, who had been an employee of UTSI from Sept.
22, 1965, until his death on Dec. 11, 1989.
Charlotte’s father, after retiring from a long career at
Genesco, also worked for Dewey Vincent as a painter, helping to
keep the Space Institute a “beautiful place.”
Newt Wright hired on at UTSI effective
Jan. 1, 1983, and would become a vital player in the Center for
Laser Applications (CLA), construction of which would get top
approval from UT trustees the next year.
“I built my first crystal radio, with Dad’s help, when I was
five, and I have been playing with electronics ever since.”
His fellow workers do not use the word “playing” when describing
Wright’s career with CLA. Jim Hornkohl, fellow research
associate, says Wright “is a master of many things in a research
laboratory and has a working knowledge of nearly everything one
might encounter in such a lab.” He said Wright has made
“significant contributions” to CLA projects, including – among
others --laser ignition of jet engine combustors, remote sensing
of jet engine particulates, rail gun research, electromagnetic
pulse devices, automated optical diagnosis of the human eye, ion
engine testing and laser mapping of the ion engine plume,
several laser materials processing and materials testing
projects.
Wright, son of Mrs. Mary Wright and the late Edward Franklin
Wright, graduated from Coffee County Central High School in 1956
and got his “ham” radio license in 1958 (and now holds an Extra
Class FCC ham license). He studied electrical engineering at
Tennessee Tech for two years and while serving in the U.S. Air
Force at Lowry Air Force Base in Denver, completed a course in
electronics. Before hiring on at UTSI, he worked as an
engineering associate at AEDC.
Wright sees his participation in the development of the electric
rail gun at CLA – part of the United States’ Strategic Defense
Initiative (“star wars”) project as perhaps the most
interesting. However, his fellow workers at CLA say he has
constructed and programmed a variety of motor driven motion
systems used in laser materials processing for probe motion in
test cells and for dynamic positioning of devices under test.
Hornkohl says numerous lasers and instruments “would have fallen
in disuse were it not for Newt’s ability to keep them working.”
He insists that one of Newt’s “extraordinary gifts is his gentle
demeanor and kindness that give him the patience to wait in good
cheer while others less gifted than he catch up.”
As for Newt himself, he expects to pursue his interests in Ham
radio, woodworking, electronics, reading, miniature model
building, jewelry work … and possibly a few projects that his
wife Sharon may have in mind.
He acknowledges the influence of his late father – a Manchester
inventor known for his tinkering and independent thinking -- who
often called himself “the old goat,” even when he ran
unsuccessfully for city alderman.

These UTSI retirees, from left,
New Wright and Marge Joseph, both of Manchester, and
Charlotte Campbell of Estill Springs, have worked a
total of 83 years at UTSI.

Patricia Burks-Jelks, left, director of Human
Resources, joins Dr. Donald C. Daniel, center, in
congratulating Charlotte Campbell, second from left,
Marge Joseph and Newt Wright on their retirement
June 30.
Newt Wright holds a Waterford crystal
vase and an aluminum base (created by Jim Hornkohl) that
CLA Director Bill Hofmeister presented to him. From left
are Newt’s wife Sharon, their daughter Sarena
Wright-Tomes, Newt, Drs. Hofmeister and Roger Crawford.
-- UTSI Photos
Writer: Weldon Payne (931) 393-7222
wpayne@utsi.edu
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